When Should We Look Out For The Little Guy? An Examination of the Inconsistencies in Antitrust Enforcement of Monopsony Power in Canada and the United States

Authors

  • Susan Hutton
  • Naime Isaj
  • Laura Rowe
  • D. Daniel Sokol

Abstract

Enforcement of competition/antitrust laws regarding the exercise of market power in respect of upstream markets (monopsony/oligopsony power) has been inconsistent in both Canada and the United States. This paper provides an overview of the competition/antitrust laws in Canada and the United States and how they have addressed (or not addressed) monopsony power both in legislation and in case law, and seeks to identify the interests that are protected by various enforcement rationales. An apparent pattern is that large suppliers seem not to be afforded the same degree of protection against monopsony as small suppliers-a pattern that is at odds with monopoly enforcement in Canada and the United States. However, this pattern is not consistently articulated or applied. The authors call for clarification by lawmakers and enforcers as to what interests they are seeking to protect from the exercise of monopsony power, and when they will intervene to do so.

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Published

2022-12-14

How to Cite

Hutton, S., Isaj, N., Rowe, L., & Sokol, D. D. (2022). When Should We Look Out For The Little Guy? An Examination of the Inconsistencies in Antitrust Enforcement of Monopsony Power in Canada and the United States. Canadian Competition Law Review, 35(2). Retrieved from https://cclr.cba.org/index.php/cclr/article/view/840